jeudi 14 novembre 2013

The
question of Islamic extremism has more relevance to Muslims than to
non-Muslims. It's mainly Muslims who are obsessed with Islamic
extremism. And with good reason. As they so often point out; they tend
to be its leading victims.

It's
not that Islamic extremism doesn't exist. Islam, like every ideology,
has its gradations. It's that for Muslims, there is a great deal at
stake in the battle over Islamic extremism. That battle will determine
whether they can listen to music, play chess or watch soccer games.
Whether men can shave their beards, women can drive cars, little girls
can go to school and little boys can grow up learning anything except
Koranic verses.

Non-Muslims however remain unequal no matter which brand of Islamic
theocracy is in charge. And either way they remain fair game in their
own countries.

Every leading form of Islam agrees that an Islamic society is perfect,
that its laws perfect man and that imposing those laws on society is a
religious duty. They may differ on whether those laws allow Muslims to
vote or fly kites; but that is small consolation to the non-Muslims who
lose their civil rights either way.

Islamic extremism is primarily concerned with imposing the extremities
of Islamic law on Muslims. As part of its Islamization campaign, it will
also kill and subjugate non-Muslims; but in this it is no different
than so-called moderate Muslims.

Islamic societies are built around an Islamic law that makes non-Muslims
second class citizens. Whether Islamic law is the basis of all
legislation, as tends to be written in the constitutions of most
"moderate" Muslim countries, or whether it actually is the legislation,
makes a great deal of difference to Muslims who fear losing the ability
to sing or play chess at the snap of a fatwa; but has less impact on
non-Muslims who are still doomed to an unequal status.

What Western secular liberals insist on describing as extremism is
really a reform movement seeking to purge innovations from the modern
Islamic admixture that date back to the ideas and customs that Islamic
empires absorbed from the cultures and peoples they conquered and
subjugated.

Reform means major changes for the descendants of the Islamic conquerors
who have learned to like the living standards of Islamic empires and
don't care for going back to the ways of their many times
great-grandfathers who were desert nomads and violently suspicious of
anything that resembled civilization.

It doesn't change things nearly as much for the non-Muslim minorities
who were conquered by those Islamic empires. Life for them would become
worse if the Salafists were to take over. But the difference lies in the
degrees of subjugation. There is no Islamic option for equal rights.

The dilution of Islam through secularism made life more livable for the
Muslim conquerors who wanted to enjoy life in their new dominions in
Egypt, the Persian Empire, Byzantium or India. They were less concerned
with the comfort of the conquered; the Christians, Jews, Hindus,
Zoroastrians and others groaning under their rule. Their increased
freedom is an unanticipated and undesired aspect of the general
liberalizing of standards that is the first thing to go when the
reaction begins.

Salafis are more likely to engage in acts of terror against Western
targets. But they certainly weren't the first Muslims to do so. The
leading edge of Muslim terror began with so-called moderates. That is
true nearly everywhere. The so-called extremists have come to seem like
the definitive terrorists and we now expect them to wear beards and
recite Koranic verses in court, but they are only following in the
footsteps of Muslim terrorists who were naturally clean shaven and whose
Islamic nationalism did not need the rigid propping up of specific
Koran verses, but who acted in its name nonetheless.

None of the gradations of Islam are friendly to the idea of non-Muslims
ruling themselves. There is no basis in Islam for tolerating such a
thing if it is at all possible for the followers of Mohammed to put a
stop to it. They may differ over tactics, but even the non-violent
immigration and missionary tactics of supposed moderate Islamic
majoritarians would still end in a theocracy in which Western Christians
and Jews would become slaves in their own countries.

This may perhaps be more merciful than a prolonged campaign of
slaughter, but it is still oppression by any other name. (Not to mention
conquest and invasion). And there is no such thing as moderate
oppression.

The Arab Spring posed the question to middle class Muslims whether a
non-violent political conquest by the Muslim Brotherhood was better than
an armed conquest by its Islamic Group splinter movement. The answer
that came in the Tahrir Square protests was a resounding, "No!"

A political conquest may be less messy for the conquerors and the
conquered, but it still takes away the rights and freedoms of the
conquered and assigns them to their conquerors. If even the urban
Muslims of Egypt didn't want Islamization on that scale, even on
peaceful terms, why would any non-Muslim accept an Islamization that
would remove far more of his civil rights?

A moderate theocracy is still a theocracy. Moderate inequality is still
inequality. A multi-tiered legal system in which religion determines
status is oppressive no matter how moderate it may be.

Western liberals associate moderation with secularism. Islam is indeed
as moderate as it is secular. Like proofs of alcohol, Islam becomes more
toxic and flammable the higher the percentage of "Islamic law" it
contains. The purer the Islam, the more violent, oppressive, reactionary
and brutal it becomes.

But the point that so many liberals miss is that even its diluted forms are still violent, oppressive and reactionary.

Distinguishing moderate and extreme Muslims is as useful as making
distinctions between moderate and extreme Nazis and Communists.

These
distinctions did and do exist, but they are less relevant in the context
of an overall ideology whose goals are war, dominance and subjugation.

A moderate Communist or Nazis was still a pretty terrible person.
Likewise, a moderate president of Iran is still a political force in a
theocracy that discriminates against non-Muslims, engages in regional
religious wars and denies many civil rights to half the population.

Western liberals obscure this basic fact in their obsession with finding
moderates to talk to. There is only so much common ground that can be
reached with someone whose founding belief is that you are inferior and
must be subjugated, whose holy book is a set of stories about its early
conquests and whose religion is oriented toward the Jihad of the final
conquests of the free world.

Moderate Muslims are still extreme by the standards of freedom in the
West. They still support violence; the only difference is that they are
more willing to try non-violent methods of conquest first. This doesn't
truly make them more peaceful, only more disingenuous. In the long run,
how much difference is there between the moderate slave owner who tricks
his slaves into putting on their own chains and the extremist slave
owner who makes them do it at gunpoint?

The end result is still the same. And that is the problem.

Post 9/11 concerns about extremism were focused on tactics with those
who threatened the most immediate violence branded as extremists while
everyone else was accepted as allies. This terrorist triage is
misleading because while it can help fight the most immediate threats,
it is only symptom management.

Islamic terrorism triage turned Saudi Arabia into an ally because its
double game of working with us and the terrorists meant that it was more
compromised and therefore somehow more moderate than the actual
terrorists. The Muslim Brotherhood is likewise considered an ally
because it is less overtly violent, at the moment and in our general
vicinity, than its Al Qaeda branch.

Focusing only on the most immediate threats is a sensible tactic for law
enforcement in an emergency, but is a disastrous strategy for political
leaders who cannot afford to become so caught up in trying to stop the
next attack that they can only see terrorists instead of mass movements
that utilize a variety of strategies and tactics for the same end.

Islamic terrorism is not reducible to Islamic extremism. If it were, we
could shut down a few websites, a few hundred mosques and bookstores,
and have a nice long talk with the Saudis, Qataris and everyone else
seeding Wahhabism around the world about what will happen if they don't
stop. We aren't likely to find the courage to do this, but even if we
did, we would only be postponing an inevitable conflict.

Terrorism is not the real threat. Islamic law is. Islamic terrorism is
just one means of imposing it on us. Immigration is another. Political
pressure is a third.

During
the Cold War, we understood that Communism was a multifaceted threat.
It was not only the soldiers and missiles behind the Iron Curtain; it
was also the presence of covert organizations and the subversion of high
officials. The Red Army and the Communist organization were just two
means of accomplishing the same ultimate ends. Likewise the Megamosque
and the plane hijackers are two means of reaching the same goals.
A clash of civilizations is approaching driven by a variety of factors,
including the collapse of European, American and Russian world power and
the demographic strength of the Muslim world. We could perhaps ignore
the implications of Islamic law for our own countries if it were not for
this sizable stream of settlers spreading across Europe and speaking
openly of the day when they will become a majority and impose
majoritarian Islamic theocracy on the native European minority.
It will not matter much if the civilization we know is lost and if the
freedoms we are familiar with are taken away by the moderates who play
the long political game or the extremists who play the short and violent
game. It will make a difference to the great-grandchildren of our
conquerors who will be able to play chess or fly kites; but our
great-grandchildren will still be as fundamentally unequal as the Copts
of Egypt or the Jews of Yemen.
An Islam that allows chess playing, but mandates the inequality of
non-Muslims should be viewed as just as extreme as any other kind.

Daniel
Greenfield is a New York City based writer and blogger and a Shillman
Journalism Fellow of the David Horowitz Freedom Center.